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Some Non-Covid Links

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George Will decries “Biden’s policy to use less affluent Americans’ money to entice more affluent Americans to buy EVs [as] only one of the contemplated regressive policies by which his administration would transfer wealth upward. [2]

Bjorn Lomborg decries environmentalists’ attempt to use the courts to impose policies that are proving to be unachievable in legislatures [3]. A slice:

This is because strong climate policy is enormously expensive and delivers minuscule climate benefits. President Biden has promised to spend $500 billion annually [4] on climate policy. Yet his much-lauded pledge to double Obama’s promised reductions [5], even if fully delivered and maintained throughout this century, will provide little climate benefit. Run on the standard UN climate model [6], Biden’s new promise will at best reduce global warming by 0.07°F by the end of the century, delivering just 2% of the global climate target.

Joakim Book decries the success of climate mainstreaming [7].

Scott Lincicome decries U.S. government subsidies to makers of microchips [8].

My intrepid Mercatus Center colleague Veronique de Rugy decries efforts to mandate paid family leave [9]. Here’s her conclusion:

In fact, rather than return to the pre-COVID and limited work arrangements, the administration and state governments should promote more flexibility in the workplace by removing the regulatory barriers that make raising a family harder. Two such changes would be to eliminate occupational licensing for child care workers and to let employees be paid in the form of additional leave time for their overtime work.

There are many more nongovernmental ideas for helping workers, and even more to be discovered. Let’s pursue them, rather than ram through a federal paid leave program.

Nick Gillespie’s new podcast with Scott Winship is excellent [10].

Matt Welch reports on the appalling “Randi Weingarten’s hilariously awful media rehabilitation tour. [11]” A slice:

Weingarten paints a dystopian picture in which schools lack soap and water, which suggests an urgent follow-up question: So what have they been spending those billions [12] of federal dollars on? There was the $13 billion [13] in the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act in March 2020, and the $54 billion [14] in the COVID-19 relief bill [15] in December 2020 (both on top of the Department of Education’s annual $40 billion [16] transfer to K-12 schools). Then there was the $81 billion already spent from the March 2021 American Rescue Plan [17] (with another $41 billion being contingent [18] on school reopening), plus $12 billion [19] in school testing, and an estimated $70 billion extra that will trickle out over the coming years.

And we’re talking soap and water?

This new essay by Art Carden – “The Extent of the Market is Limited By the Imagination of the Regulators” – is important [20]. A slice:

The argument for regulation gets considerably weaker when the regulators themselves don’t actually know what the product is. Regulatory roadblocks on fermented foods [21] are a product with which I have a bit of personal experience. Incidentally, it speaks volumes about business and the legal/regulatory environment that one of the tracks at the 2021 International Fermentation Conference is “Business, Legal, and Regulatory,” where participants can “Learn how to launch and grow a fermentation business, and navigate the industry’s legal and regulatory hurdles.” As John W. Dawson and John J. Seater explain in a 2013 article in the Journal of Economic Growth [22], regulation has slowed economic growth considerably.

Why Arnold Kling became a neverTrumper [23].

John McWhorter calls for ditching the term “systemic racism.” [24] (HT Arnold Kling)

Wisdom from Pierre Lemieux [25].

David Henderson predicts inflation, although not hyperinflation [26].

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